It seems like Wikileaks has no intention of quitting on Sony, since new e-mail leaks between Sony chair Amy Pascal and director Cameron Crowe surfaced. Pascal has already lost her job because of the leaks, where she bashed Angelina Jolie and revealed that Jennifer Lawrence and Amy Adams received a much lower pay compared to their co-stars in American Hustle.

E! Online reported that the two were talking about Bradley Cooper and Emma Stone, who both star in the movie Aloha. Their e-mails were dated starting on March 31, 2014, and Pascal is raving about what she's seen so far of Aloha. In response, Crowe said that the acting in the new movie trumps any performance given for Say Anything, which stars John Cusack.

"Frankly, we have great options on all the performances except Bill Murray...who pretty much is what you saw," Cameron wrote to Pascal with a time stamp of 10:17 p.m.

"Exactly the movie belongs to Bradley Cooper more than I realized in the process," Pascal replied shortly at 10:22 p.m.

Then the two talked how they would be introducing Emma Stone's character, and the director said, "I have the shot on Emma...It's a movie star intro shot...Maybe time to put it back in...It is very powerful and overshadowed everything around it...But might feel different now."

He later wrote in a different email: "Big lesson from today...You don't slip Emma in...Let's give her fanfare again...Movie has now earned it."

"She isn't bigger than the movie," Pascal replied. "Trust that. Now she needs to ignite it to get it to the next level and it's gonna be a cross between an idea she has about herself and an actual self that he makes her pay attention to (much to her shock)."

The e-mail thread ends with Crowe's response, in which he calls Cooper, who starred in Clint Eastwood's American Sniper film an "odd bird."

"Frankly Bradley is such an odd bird getting him right is tricky but he's fine now so lets just let him cook where he is and take care of our girl... And her nuances ... Little moves on her are huge as u know," he wrote.

Sony Pictures Entertainment is still fuming over the Wikileaks, calling it a malicious criminal act. The company said that the attackers want to harm its more than 6,000 employees and it is regrettable that Wikileaks is even giving them assistance.